French investigators think they know who masterminded the deadliest terrorist assault in peacetime France: Abdelhamid Abaaoud, a 20-something Belgian who joined the ranks of the Islamic State group a few years ago.
The son of a Moroccan shopkeeper, familiar to the intelligence community for his high-profile presence on social media, Abaaoud is being studied by investigators as the man who orchestrated the seven attacks in the Paris area on Friday that left at least 129 people dead and hundreds more wounded, the Paris Prosecutors’ Office said. Abaaoud, who Le Monde newspaper said is 28, is also linked by French officials to a failed assault on a Paris-bound high-speed train in August and a plot to attack a church in the city in April.
Belgian security officials began tracking him in March last year after he appeared in a video behind the wheel of a pickup truck, dragging mutilated bodies to a mass grave in Syria. About six months later, photographs surfaced on the Internet indicating he had lured his 13-year-old brother, Younes, to the war zone.
Photo: AFP
Like many jihadis, Abaaoud leads a ghost-like existence, with investigators scarcely able to piece together an outline of his whereabouts. His trail went cold in Greece after thwarted assaults against Belgian police in January, which he is accused of planning. He is believed to have returned to Syria. Western allies sought to kill Abaaoud in an airstrike in the weeks before the Paris attacks, but failed to find him, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing two unidentified Western security officials.
The Paris attacks were “decided, planned in Syria, organized in Belgium and carried out in France,” French President Francois Hollande told lawmakers on Monday in a rare joint session of the two houses of parliament in Versailles, France. There are few clues to Abaaoud’s radicalization. He grew up in Molenbeek, a working-class district of Brussels, where the now-banned Shariah4Belgium extremist group was particularly active in seeking recruits among the disenfranchised and alienated youth. The Guardian reported that he had committed several armed robberies.
His father said he was a good son whose actions have brought shame to the family.
“Why would he want to kill innocent Belgians? Our family owes everything to this country,” Omar Abaaoud told La Derniere Heure newspaper this year. “Abdelhamid was not a difficult child and became a good businessman. Suddenly, he left for Syria. I wondered every day how he became radicalized to this point. I never got an answer.”
In July, Abaaoud was sentenced in absentia to 20 years in prison by a Belgian court, along with 31 other militants, for a plot to attack police officers.
The video of Abaaoud dragging corpses comes from a cellphone found by Free Syrian Army soldiers that they gave to French journalist Etienne Huver, who last year spent time on the Turkish-Syrian border. It turned out to be Abaaoud’s.
The oldest photographs on the phone are banal, showing images of family members, cartoons, Huver said in a televised interview. In January last year, his phone activity showed searches for a suitable car for a long road trip. One month later, Abaaoud appeared in Syria wearing the traditional Afghan shalwar kameez tunic and pants that have become a uniform of sorts for jihadists, brandishing his Kalashnikov and other weapons.
In the pickup-truck video, Abaaoud arrives at the scene of a bloodbath and films corpses of men wearing Syrian army uniforms.
“They fought for democracy, for secularism, for money,” he says. “They are fighting us because we want to establish Shariah law.”
Inside a nearby house are the bodies of dead civilians, a man who had been chopping onions and a child carrying a plate. He shows no remorse as he walks through the rooms.
“Before, we pulled jet skis, quads, motorcycles, luggage full of presents to go on holiday in Morocco,” he says, grinning in the pickup.
“Now, we are pulling Kufar, Murtads,” he adds, using derogatory Arabic terms used to refer to so-called non-believers.
On Facebook, he called himself a “terrorist tourist.”
Abaaoud’s social media presence stopped soon after all the cell phone data was released. He re-emerged in February, when the Islamic State group’s English-language Dabiq magazine published what it said was an interview with him. He was referred to as Abu Umar al-Baljiki and discussed the planned assault on Belgian police in January and the subsequent shootout in which two of his co-conspirators were killed.
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